Formation conditions of Titan and Enceladus' building blocks in Saturn's circumplanetary disk
Sarah Anderson, Olivier Mousis, and Thomas Ronnet

TL;DR
This study models Saturn's circumplanetary disk to understand the formation conditions of Titan and Enceladus, focusing on volatile species evolution and the disk's physical parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified disk model varying the centrifugal radius to identify conditions conducive to forming moons with observed compositions.
Findings
Optimal formation region between CO and N2 icelines.
Centrifugal radius of 66-100 Saturn radii supports moon formation.
Longer volatile retention times favor moon building blocks.
Abstract
The building blocks of Titan and Enceladus are believed to have formed in a late-stage circumplanetary disk around Saturn. Evaluating the evolution of the abundances of volatile species in this disk as a function of the migration, growth, and evaporation of icy grains is then of primary importance to assess the origin of the material that eventually formed these two moons. Here we use a simple prescription of Saturn's circumplanetary disk in which the location of the centrifugal radius is varied, to investigate the time evolution of the icelines of water ice, ammonia hydrate, methane clathrate, carbon monoxide and dinitrogen pure condensates. To match their compositional data, the building blocks of both moons would have had to form in a region of the circumplanetary disk situated between the icelines of carbon monoxide and dinitrogen at their outer limit, and the iceline of methane…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomical and nuclear sciences
